The
Congressional Research Service (CRS) has concluded that House Appropriations
Committee chairman Rep. Hal Rogers (R-KY) is wrong, and that Congress can in
fact block funding for President Barack Obama’s executive amnesty order.
“In light of Congress’s constitutional
power over the purse, the Supreme Court has recognized that ‘Congress may
always circumscribe agency discretion to allocate resources by putting
restrictions in the operative statutes,’” the CRS, a legislative authority on
Capitol Hill, wrote in a report sent to incoming Senate Budget Committee
chairman Sen. Jeff Sessions (R-AL). “Where Congress has done so, ‘an agency is
not free simply to disregard statutory responsibilities.’ Therefore, if a
statute were enacted which prohibited appropriated funds from being used for
some specified purposes, then the relevant funds would be unavailable to be
obligated or expended for those purposes.”
Sessions’ team provided the CRS
report—which is not made public unless members of Congress who request such
reports decide to make them so—exclusively to Breitbart News.
Rogers, last week, argued that Congress could not block funding for
Obama’s executive amnesty because the agency that will be printing the work
authorization and other documents for illegal aliens—U.S. Citizenship and
Immigration Services (USCIS)—operates primarily on fees it collects rather than
from tax revenue collected by the federal government.
The House Appropriations Committee,
which Rogers chairs, said in a statement last week:
The primary agency for implementing the President's new immigration
executive order is the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS). This
agency is entirely self-funded through the fees it collects on various
immigration applications. Congress does not appropriate funds for any of its
operations, including the issuance of immigration status or work permits, with
the exception of the 'E-Verify' program. Therefore, the Appropriations process
cannot be used to 'de-fund' the agency. The agency has the ability to continue
to collect and use fees to continue current operations, and to expand
operations as under a new Executive Order, without needing legislative approval
by the Appropriations Committee or the Congress, even under a continuing
resolution or a government shutdown.
But the CRS report that Sessions
requested shows that is untrue. Even if an agency like USCIS operates on fees
rather than tax revenues appropriated by Congress, the Congress can still block
funding for the implementation of such matters as Obama’s executive
amnesty. CRS wrote:
A fee-funded agency or activity typically refers to one in which the
amounts appropriated by Congress for that agency or activity are derived from
fees collected from some external source. Importantly, amounts received as fees
by federal agencies must still be appropriated by Congress to that agency in
order to be available for obligation or expenditure by the agency. In some
cases, this appropriation is provided through the annual appropriations
process. In other instances, it is an appropriation that has been enacted
independently of the annual appropriations process (such as a permanent
appropriation in an authorizing act). In either case, the funds available to
the agency through fee collections would be subject to the same potential
restrictions imposed by Congress on the use of its appropriations as any other
type of appropriated funds.
Cutting the legalese language here,
basically this means that, no matter how USCIS gets it money—even if it’s from
a prior authorization appropriation that is permanent and based on fee
collection—Congress can still restrict the use of that money for some purposes.
On the night Obama announced the
amnesty—last Thursday—Sessions said that the House of Representatives must lead
by passing a government funding bill that blocks any money being spent on
Obama’s amnesty.
“The House should send the Senate a
government funding bill which ensures no funds can be spent for this unlawful
purpose,” Sessions said. “If [Outgoing Senate Majority Leader Harry]
Reid’s Senate Democrats vote to surrender their own institution to an imperial
dictate and block the measure, then the House should send a short-term funding
measure so the new GOP majority can be sworn in and pass a funding bill with
the needed language.”
The Conservative Review’s Daniel
Horowitz laid out on Tuesday how one of the things “lost
amidst the hullabaloo of mob rule in Ferguson” is that the GOP is planning to
“capitulate” to Obama’s amnesty. Part of that caving by Speaker John Boehner to
Obama on executive amnesty, Horowitz notes, is that Republicans will promise to
fight later—but won’t block the funding of it now.
“This strategy allows GOP leaders to
promise a fight three months from now, after Obama’s executive action becomes
more entrenched, without having to fight on defund immediately,” Horowitz
wrote. “It will also buy them time to work on the second step: negotiating with
Obama to pass amnesty legislatively.”
If Rogers—or other top allies of
Speaker Boehner like 2012 GOP vice presidential candidate Rep. Paul Ryan
(R-WI)—don’t block the funding of Obama’s executive amnesty, they could face
dire consequences.
“Some Kentucky Tea Party activists are
already talking about a primary challenge to Representative Harold Rogers,
chairman of the Appropriations Committee, who has been in office since 1981,”
the New York Times’ Jeremy Peters wrote on Tuesday. “Breitbart News, a conservative
website, reported on the possible primary challenger this week. Mr. Rogers’
office has said Congress could not simply defund the president’s directive,
because the agency that carries it out, Citizenship and Immigration Services,
is not financed by appropriations but by the fees it generates.”
Later in the story, Peters noted that
Ryan and even Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL) could face primary challenges in 2016.
“Other potential primary targets, Tea
Party groups say, are Representative Paul D. Ryan of Wisconsin, the 2012
Republican vice-presidential nominee, and even Senator Marco Rubio, Republican
of Florida, who was elected initially with the help of Tea Party energy,”
Peters wrote.
Source:http://www.breitbart.com/Big-Government/2014/11/25/Exclusive-Congressional-Research-Service-Congress-Has-Power-To-Block-Funding-For-Obamas
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